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  1. St Edmund Hall, known affectionately as Teddy Hall, is a college of the University of Oxford, accepting undergraduate, postgraduate and visiting students.

  2. St Edmund Hall (sometimes known as The Hall or informally as Teddy Hall) is a constituent college of the University of Oxford. The college claims to be "the oldest surviving academic society to house and educate undergraduates in any university" and was the last surviving medieval academic hall at the university.

  3. St Edmund Hall is home to a large, diverse and inclusive community. The Hall’s intake of approximately 110 undergraduates, selected on merit and irrespective of background, comprises students with academic ability, passion for their subjects and the potential to excel.

  4. St Edmund Hall is one of the oldest undergraduate teaching institutions in the world, and nowadays also plays host to a vibrant and friendly community of around 300 graduate students.

  5. Welcome to St Edmund Hall, affectionately known as ‘Teddy Hall’, and one of the oldest colleges at the University of Oxford. We are the last standing medieval Hall in Oxford, dating back to at least the thirteenth century and are known for our friendly atmosphere, and sporting and creative traditions. Located in the heart of Oxford, we are ...

  6. The Directory is an online resource, a collection of profiles, which celebrates the achievements of writers who have studied or worked at St Edmund Hall. View Directory. Search for profiles of Fellows, lecturers and staff, and view current job vacancies at St Edmund Hall.

  7. St Edmund Hall virtual tour. 360° views of St Edmund Hall. These images cover facilities such as the dining hall, library, JCR, chapel, as well as an example of a student room, garden or quad, and the porters’ lodge.

  8. www.oxfordvisit.com › university-and-colleges › st-edmund-hallSt Edmund Hall - OxfordVisit

    St Edmund Hall, also known as Teddy Hall, is a constituent college of the University of Oxford. The college claims to be “the oldest surviving academic society to house and educate undergraduate students at any university” and was the last surviving medieval academic building at the university.

  9. Founded at some point before 1317, St Edmund Hall is the sole survivor of Oxford’s original medieval halls, the teaching institutions that preceded the colleges. ‘Teddy Hall’ to residents, it became a college itself in 1957, and holds a chapel decorated by William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones.

  10. The gardens of St Edmund Hall are on an intimate scale, much used and loved by the college's Fellows and students. The first sight is the college's historic front quad ('the most exquisite of the small Oxford quadrangles' according to Jan Morris) with its double lawn, clambering wisteria, and medieval well.